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Surface wave

In physics, a surface wave is a mechanical wave that propagates along the interface between differing media. A common example is gravity waves along the surface of liquids, such as ocean waves. Gravity waves can also occur within liquids, at the interface between two fluids with different densities. Elastic surface waves can travel along the surface of solids, such as Rayleigh or Love waves. Electromagnetic waves can also propagate as "surface waves" in that they can be guided along with a refractive index gradient or along an interface between two media having different dielectric constants. In radio transmission, a ground wave is a guided wave that propagates close to the surface of the Earth.[1]

A diving grebe creates surface waves.

Mechanical waves edit

In seismology, several types of surface waves are encountered. Surface waves, in this mechanical sense, are commonly known as either Love waves (L waves) or Rayleigh waves. A seismic wave is a wave that travels through the Earth, often as the result of an earthquake or explosion. Love waves have transverse motion (movement is perpendicular to the direction of travel, like light waves), whereas Rayleigh waves have both longitudinal (movement parallel to the direction of travel, like sound waves) and transverse motion. Seismic waves are studied by seismologists and measured by a seismograph or seismometer. Surface waves span a wide frequency range, and the period of waves that are most damaging is usually 10 seconds or longer. Surface waves can travel around the globe many times from the largest earthquakes. Surface waves are caused when P waves and S waves come to the surface.

Examples are the waves at the surface of water and air (ocean surface waves). Another example is internal waves, which can be transmitted along the interface of two water masses of different densities.

In theory of hearing physiology, the traveling wave (TW) of Von Bekesy, resulted from an acoustic surface wave of the basilar membrane into the cochlear duct. His theory purported to explain every feature of the auditory sensation owing to these passive mechanical phenomena. Jozef Zwislocki, and later David Kemp, showed that that is unrealistic and that active feedback is necessary.

Electromagnetic waves edit

Ground waves are radio waves propagating parallel to and adjacent to the surface of the Earth, following the curvature of the Earth. This radiative ground wave is known as Norton surface wave, or more properly Norton ground wave, because ground waves in radio propagation are not confined to the surface.

Another type of surface wave is the non-radiative, bound-mode Zenneck surface wave or Zenneck–Sommerfeld surface wave.[2][3][4][5][6] The earth has one refractive index and the atmosphere has another, thus constituting an interface that supports the guided Zenneck wave's transmission. Other types of surface wave are the trapped surface wave,[7] the gliding wave and Dyakonov surface waves (DSW) propagating at the interface of transparent materials with different symmetry.[8][9][10][11] Apart from these, various types of surface waves have been studied for optical wavelengths.[12]

Microwave field theory edit

Within microwave field theory, the interface of a dielectric and conductor supports "surface wave transmission". Surface waves have been studied as part of transmission lines and some may be considered as single-wire transmission lines.

Characteristics and utilizations of the electrical surface wave phenomenon include:

  • The field components of the wave diminish with distance from the interface.
  • Electromagnetic energy is not converted from the surface wave field to another form of energy (except in leaky or lossy surface waves)[13] such that the wave does not transmit power normal to the interface, i.e. it is evanescent along that dimension.[14]
  • In coaxial cable in addition to the TEM mode there also exists a transverse-magnetic (TM) mode[15] which propagates as a surface wave in the region around the central conductor. For coax of common impedance this mode is effectively suppressed but in high impedance coax and on a single central conductor without any outer shield, low attenuation and very broadband propagation is supported. Transmission line operation in this mode is called E-Line.

Surface plasmon polariton edit

 
The E-field of a surface plasmon polariton at a silver–air interface, at a frequency corresponding to a free-space wavelength of 10μm. At this frequency, the silver behaves approximately as a perfect electric conductor, and the SPP is called a Sommerfeld–Zenneck wave, with almost the same wavelength as the free-space wavelength.

The surface plasmon polariton (SPP) is an electromagnetic surface wave that can travel along an interface between two media with different dielectric constants. It exists under the condition that the permittivity of one of the materials [6] forming the interface is negative, while the other one is positive, as is the case for the interface between air and a lossy conducting medium below the plasma frequency. The wave propagates parallel to the interface and decays exponentially vertical to it, a property called evanescence. Since the wave is on the boundary of a lossy conductor and a second medium, these oscillations can be sensitive to changes to the boundary, such as the adsorption of molecules by the conducting surface.[16]

Sommerfeld–Zenneck surface wave edit

The Sommerfeld–Zenneck wave or Zenneck wave is a non-radiative guided electromagnetic wave that is supported by a planar or spherical interface between two homogeneous media having different dielectric constants. This surface wave propagates parallel to the interface and decays exponentially vertical to it, a property known as evanescence. It exists under the condition that the permittivity of one of the materials forming the interface is negative, while the other one is positive, as for example the interface between air and a lossy conducting medium such as the terrestrial transmission line, below the plasma frequency. Its electric field strength falls off at a rate of e-αd/√d in the direction of propagation along the interface due to two-dimensional geometrical field spreading at a rate of 1/√d, in combination with a frequency-dependent exponential attenuation (α), which is the terrestrial transmission line dissipation, where α depends on the medium’s conductivity. Arising from original analysis by Arnold Sommerfeld and Jonathan Zenneck of the problem of wave propagation over a lossy earth, it exists as an exact solution to Maxwell's equations.[17] The Zenneck surface wave, which is a non-radiating guided-wave mode, can be derived by employing the Hankel transform of a radial ground current associated with a realistic terrestrial Zenneck surface wave source.[6] Sommerfeld-Zenneck surface waves predict that the energy decays as R−1 because the energy distributes over the circumference of a circle and not the surface of a sphere. Evidence does not show that in radio space wave propagation, Sommerfeld-Zenneck surfaces waves are a mode of propagation as the path-loss exponent is generally between 20 dB/dec and 40 dB/dec.

See also edit

People
Other
  • Ground constants, the electrical parameters of earth
  • Near and far field, the radiated field that is within one quarter of a wavelength of the diffracting edge or the antenna and beyond.
  • Skin effect, the tendency of an alternating electric current to distribute itself within a conductor so that the current density near the surface of the conductor is greater than that at its core.
  • Surface wave inversion
  • Green's function, a function used to solve inhomogeneous differential equations subject to boundary conditions.

References edit

  1. ^   This article incorporates public domain material from . General Services Administration. Archived from the original on 2022-01-22. (in support of MIL-STD-188).
  2. ^ The Physical Reality of Zenneck's Surface Wave.
  3. ^ Hill, D. A., and J. R. Wait (1978), Excitation of the Zenneck surface wave by a vertical aperture, Radio Sci., 13(6), 969–977, doi:10.1029/RS013i006p00969.
  4. ^ Goubau, G., "Über die Zennecksche Bodenwelle," (On the Zenneck Surface Wave), Zeitschrift für Angewandte Physik, Vol. 3, 1951, Nrs. 3/4, pp. 103–107.
  5. ^ Barlow, H.; Brown, J. (1962). "II". Radio Surface Waves. London: Oxford University Press. pp. 10–12.
  6. ^ a b c Corum, K. L., M. W. Miller, J. F. Corum, "Surface Waves and the Crucial Propagation Experiment,” Proceedings of the 2016 Texas Symposium on Wireless and Microwave Circuits and Systems (WMCS 2016), Baylor University, Waco, TX, March 31-April 1, 2016, IEEE, MTT-S, ISBN 9781509027569.
  7. ^ Wait, James, "Excitation of Surface Waves on Conducting, Stratified, Dielectric-Clad, and Corrugated Surfaces," Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards Vol. 59, No.6, December 1957.
  8. ^ Dyakonov, M. I. (April 1988). "New type of electromagnetic wave propagating at an interface". Soviet Physics JETP. 67 (4): 714. Bibcode:1988JETP...67..714D.
  9. ^ Takayama, O.; Crasovan, L. C., Johansen, S. K.; Mihalache, D, Artigas, D.; Torner, L. (2008). "Dyakonov Surface Waves: A Review". Electromagnetics. 28 (3): 126–145. doi:10.1080/02726340801921403. S2CID 121726611.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Takayama, O.; Crasovan, L. C., Artigas, D.; Torner, L. (2009). "Observation of Dyakonov surface waves". Physical Review Letters. 102 (4): 043903. Bibcode:2009PhRvL.102d3903T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.043903. PMID 19257419. S2CID 14540394.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Takayama, O.; Artigas, D., Torner, L. (2014). "Lossless directional guiding of light in dielectric nanosheets using Dyakonov surface waves". Nature Nanotechnology. 9 (6): 419–424. Bibcode:2014NatNa...9..419T. doi:10.1038/nnano.2014.90. PMID 24859812.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Takayama, O.; Bogdanov, A. A., Lavrinenko, A. V. (2017). "Photonic surface waves on metamaterial interfaces". Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter. 29 (46): 463001. Bibcode:2017JPCM...29T3001T. doi:10.1088/1361-648X/aa8bdd. PMID 29053474.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Liu, Hsuan-Hao; Chang, Hung-Chun (2013). "Leaky Surface Plasmon Polariton Modes at an Interface Between Metal and Uniaxially Anisotropic Materials". IEEE Photonics Journal. 5 (6): 4800806. Bibcode:2013IPhoJ...500806L. doi:10.1109/JPHOT.2013.2288298.
  14. ^ Collin, R. E., Field Theory of Guided Waves, Chapter 11 "Surface Waveguides". New York: Wiley-IEEE Press, 1990.
  15. ^ "(TM) mode" (PDF). corridor.biz. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  16. ^ S. Zeng; Baillargeat, Dominique; Ho, Ho-Pui; Yong, Ken-Tye (2014). "Nanomaterials enhanced surface plasmon resonance for biological and chemical sensing applications". Chemical Society Reviews. 43 (10): 3426–3452. doi:10.1039/C3CS60479A. hdl:10220/18851. PMID 24549396.
  17. ^ Barlow, H.; Brown, J. (1962). Radio Surface Waves. London: Oxford University Press. pp. v, vii.

Further reading edit

Standards and doctrines edit

  • "Surface wave 2017-09-03 at the Wayback Machine". Telecom Glossary 2000, ATIS Committee T1A1, Performance and Signal Processing, T1.523–2001.
  • "Surface wave", Federal Standard 1037C.
  • "Surface wave", MIL-STD-188
  • "Multi-service tactics, techniques, and procedures for the High-Frequency Automatic Link Establishment (HF-ALE): FM 6-02.74; MCRP 3–40.3E; NTTP 6-02.6; AFTTP(I) 3-2.48; COMDTINST M2000.7" Sept., 2003.

Books edit

  • Barlow, H.M., and Brown, J., "Radio Surface Waves", Oxford University Press 1962.
  • Budden, K. G., "Radio waves in the ionosphere; the mathematical theory of the reflection of radio waves from stratified ionised layers". Cambridge, Eng., University Press, 1961. LCCN 61016040 /L/r85
  • Budden, K. G., "The wave-guide mode theory of wave propagation". London, Logos Press; Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall, c1961. LCCN 62002870 /L
  • Budden, K. G., " The propagation of radio waves : the theory of radio waves of low power in the ionosphere and magnetosphere". Cambridge (Cambridgeshire); New York : Cambridge University Press, 1985. ISBN 0-521-25461-2 LCCN 84028498
  • Collin, R. E., "Field Theory of Guided Waves". New York: Wiley-IEEE Press, 1990.
  • Foti, S., Lai, C.G., Rix, G.J., and Strobbia, C., "“Surface Wave Methods for Near-Surface Site Characterization”", CRC Press, Boca Raton, Florida (USA), 487 pp., ISBN 9780415678766, 2014 <https://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9780415678766>
  • Sommerfeld, A., "Partial Differential Equations in Physics" (English version), Academic Press Inc., New York 1949, chapter 6 – "Problems of Radio".
  • Polo Jr., J. A., Mackay, T. G., and Lakhtakia, A., "Electromagnetic Surface Waves: A Modern Perspective". Waltham, MA, USA: Elsevier, 2013 <https://www.elsevier.com/books/electromagnetic-surface-waves/polo/978-0-12-397024-4>.
  • Rawer, K.,"Wave Propagation in the Ionosphere", Dordrecht, Kluwer Acad.Publ. 1993.
  • Sommerfeld, A., "Partial Differential Equations in Physics" (English version), Academic Press Inc., New York 1949, chapter 6 – "Problems of Radio".
  • Weiner, Melvin M., "Monopole antennas" New York, Marcel Dekker, 2003. ISBN 0-8247-0496-7
  • Wait, J. R., "Electromagnetic Wave Theory", New York, Harper and Row, 1985.
  • Wait, J. R., "The Waves in Stratified Media". New York: Pergamon, 1962.
  • Waldron, Richard Arthur, "Theory of guided electromagnetic waves". London, New York, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1970. ISBN 0-442-09167-2 LCCN 69019848 //r86
  • Weiner, Melvin M., "Monopole antennas" New York, Marcel Dekker, 2003. ISBN 0-8247-0496-7

Journals and papers edit

Zenneck, Sommerfeld, Norton, and Goubau
  • J. Zenneck, (translators: P. Blanchin, G. Guérard, É. Picot), "Précis de télégraphie sans fil : complément de l'ouvrage : Les oscillations électromagnétiques et la télégraphie sans fil", Paris : Gauthier-Villars, 1911. viii, 385 p. : ill.; 26 cm. (Tr. "Precisions of wireless telegraphy: complement of the work: Electromagnetic oscillations and wireless telegraphy.")
  • J. Zenneck, "Über die Fortpflanzung ebener elektromagnetischer Wellen längs einer ebenen Leiterfläche und ihre Beziehung zur drahtlosen Telegraphie", Annalen der Physik, vol. 23, pp. 846–866, Sept. 1907. (Tr. "About the propagation of electromagnetic plane waves along a conductor plane and their relationship to wireless telegraphy.")
  • J. Zenneck, "Elektromagnetische Schwingungen und drahtlose Telegraphie", gart, F. Enke, 1905. xxvii, 1019 p. : ill.; 24 cm. (Tr. "Electromagnetic oscillations and wireless telegraphy.")
  • J. Zenneck, (translator: A.E. Seelig) "Wireless telegraphy,", New York [etc.] McGraw-Hill Book Company, inc., 1st ed. 1915. xx, 443 p. illus., diagrs. 24 cm. LCCN 15024534 (ed. "Bibliography and notes on theory" pp. 408–428.)
  • A. Sommerfeld, "Über die Fortpflanzung elektrodynamischer Wellen längs eines Drahtes", Ann. der Physik und Chemie, vol. 67, pp. 233–290, Dec 1899. (Tr. "Propagation of electro-dynamic waves along a cylindric conductor.")
  • A. Sommerfeld, "Über die Ausbreitung der Wellen in der drahtlosen Telegraphie", Annalen der Physik, Vol. 28, pp. 665–736, March 1909. (Tr. "About the Propagation of waves in wireless telegraphy.")
  • A. Sommerfeld, "Propagation of waves in wireless telegraphy," Ann. Phys., vol. 81, pp. 1367–1153, 1926.
  • K. A. Norton, "The propagation of radio waves over the surface of the earth and in the upper atmosphere," Proc. IRE, vol. 24, pp. 1367–1387, 1936.
  • K. A. Norton, "The calculations of ground wave field intensity over a finitely conducting spherical earth," Proc. IRE, vol. 29, pp. 623–639, 1941.
  • G. Goubau, "Surface waves and their application to transmission lines," J. Appl. Phys., vol. 21, pp. 1119–1128; November,1950.
  • G. Goubau, “Über die Zennecksche Bodenwelle,” (Tr."On the Zenneck Surface Wave."), Zeitschrift für Angewandte Physik, Vol. 3, 1951, Nrs. 3/4, pp. 103–107.
Wait
  • Wait, J. R., "Lateral Waves and the Pioneering Research of the Late Kenneth A Norton".
  • Wait, J. R., and D. A. Hill, "Excitation of the HF surface wave by vertical and horizontal apertures". Radio Science, 14, 1979, pp 767–780.
  • Wait, J. R., and D. A. Hill, "Excitation of the Zenneck Surface Wave by a Vertical Aperture", Radio Science, Vol. 13, No. 6, November–December, 1978, pp. 969–977.
  • Wait, J. R., "A note on surface waves and ground waves", IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, Nov 1965. Vol. 13, Issue 6, pp. 996–997 ISSN 0096-1973
  • Wait, J. R., "The ancient and modern history of EM ground-wave propagation". IEEE Antennas Propagat. Mag., vol. 40, pp. 7–24, Oct. 1998.
  • Wait, J. R., "Appendix C: On the theory of ground wave propagation over a slightly roughned curved earth", Electromagnetic Probing in Geophysics. Boulder, CO., Golem, 1971, pp. 37–381.
  • Wait, J. R., "Electromagnetic surface waves", Advances in Radio Research, 1, New York, Academic Press, 1964, pp. 157–219.
Others
  • R. E. Collin, "Hertzian Dipole Radiating Over a Lossy Earth or Sea: Some Early and Late 20th-Century Controversies", Antennas and Propagation Magazine, 46, 2004, pp. 64–79.
  • F. J. Zucker, "Surface wave antennas and surface wave excited arrays", Antenna Engineering Handbook, 2nd ed., R. C. Johnson and H. Jasik, Eds. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1984.
  • Yu. V. Kistovich, "Possibility of Observing Zenneck Surface Waves in Radiation from a Source with a Small Vertical Aperture", Soviet Physics Technical Physics, Vol. 34, No.4, April, 1989, pp. 391–394.
  • V. I. Baĭbakov, V. N. Datsko, Yu. V. Kistovich, "Experimental discovery of Zenneck's surface electromagnetic waves", Sov Phys Uspekhi, 1989, 32 (4), 378–379.
  • Corum, K. L. and J. F. Corum, "The Zenneck Surface Wave", Nikola Tesla, Lightning Observations, and Stationary Waves, Appendix II. 1994.
  • M. J. King and J. C. Wiltse, "Surface-Wave Propagation on Coated or Uncoated Metal Wires at Millimeter Wavelengths". J. Appl. Phys., vol. 21, pp. 1119–1128; November,
  • M. J. King and J. C. Wiltse, "Surface-Wave Propagation on a Dielectric Rod of Electric Cross-Section." Electronic Communications, Inc., Tirnonium: kld. Sci. Rept.'No. 1, AFCKL Contract No. AF 19(601)-5475; August, 1960.
  • T. Kahan and G. Eckart, "On the Electromagnetic Surface Wave of Sommerfeld", Phys. Rev. 76, 406–410 (1949).

Other media edit

  • L.A. Ostrovsky (ed.), "Laboratory modeling and theoretical studies of surface wave modulation by a moving sphere", m, Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Laboratories, 2002. OCLC 50325097

External links edit

  • The Feynman Lectures on Physics: Surface waves
  • Eric W. Weisstein, et al., "Surface Wave", Eric Weisstein's World of Physics, 2006.
  • David Reiss, "Electromagnetic surface waves". The Net Advance of Physics: Special Reports, No. 1
  • Gary Peterson, "Rediscovering the Zenneck wave". Feed Line No. 4. (ed. reproduction available online at 21st Century Books)
  • 3D Waves by Jesse Nochella based on a program by Stephen Wolfram, Wolfram Demonstrations Project.
  • Hendry, Janice (2009). "SURFACE WAVES: WHAT ARE THEY? WHY ARE THEY INTERESTING?" (PDF). ARMMS RF & MICROWAVE SOCIETY. Roke Manor Research Ltd. Retrieved 24 December 2023.

surface, wave, physics, surface, wave, mechanical, wave, that, propagates, along, interface, between, differing, media, common, example, gravity, waves, along, surface, liquids, such, ocean, waves, gravity, waves, also, occur, within, liquids, interface, betwe. In physics a surface wave is a mechanical wave that propagates along the interface between differing media A common example is gravity waves along the surface of liquids such as ocean waves Gravity waves can also occur within liquids at the interface between two fluids with different densities Elastic surface waves can travel along the surface of solids such as Rayleigh or Love waves Electromagnetic waves can also propagate as surface waves in that they can be guided along with a refractive index gradient or along an interface between two media having different dielectric constants In radio transmission a ground wave is a guided wave that propagates close to the surface of the Earth 1 A diving grebe creates surface waves Contents 1 Mechanical waves 2 Electromagnetic waves 2 1 Microwave field theory 2 2 Surface plasmon polariton 2 3 Sommerfeld Zenneck surface wave 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 Standards and doctrines 5 2 Books 5 3 Journals and papers 5 4 Other media 6 External linksMechanical waves editFurther information Gravity wave In seismology several types of surface waves are encountered Surface waves in this mechanical sense are commonly known as either Love waves L waves or Rayleigh waves A seismic wave is a wave that travels through the Earth often as the result of an earthquake or explosion Love waves have transverse motion movement is perpendicular to the direction of travel like light waves whereas Rayleigh waves have both longitudinal movement parallel to the direction of travel like sound waves and transverse motion Seismic waves are studied by seismologists and measured by a seismograph or seismometer Surface waves span a wide frequency range and the period of waves that are most damaging is usually 10 seconds or longer Surface waves can travel around the globe many times from the largest earthquakes Surface waves are caused when P waves and S waves come to the surface Examples are the waves at the surface of water and air ocean surface waves Another example is internal waves which can be transmitted along the interface of two water masses of different densities In theory of hearing physiology the traveling wave TW of Von Bekesy resulted from an acoustic surface wave of the basilar membrane into the cochlear duct His theory purported to explain every feature of the auditory sensation owing to these passive mechanical phenomena Jozef Zwislocki and later David Kemp showed that that is unrealistic and that active feedback is necessary Electromagnetic waves editFurther information Ground wave Ground waves are radio waves propagating parallel to and adjacent to the surface of the Earth following the curvature of the Earth This radiative ground wave is known as Norton surface wave or more properly Norton ground wave because ground waves in radio propagation are not confined to the surface Another type of surface wave is the non radiative bound mode Zenneck surface wave or Zenneck Sommerfeld surface wave 2 3 4 5 6 The earth has one refractive index and the atmosphere has another thus constituting an interface that supports the guided Zenneck wave s transmission Other types of surface wave are the trapped surface wave 7 the gliding wave and Dyakonov surface waves DSW propagating at the interface of transparent materials with different symmetry 8 9 10 11 Apart from these various types of surface waves have been studied for optical wavelengths 12 Microwave field theory edit Within microwave field theory the interface of a dielectric and conductor supports surface wave transmission Surface waves have been studied as part of transmission lines and some may be considered as single wire transmission lines Characteristics and utilizations of the electrical surface wave phenomenon include The field components of the wave diminish with distance from the interface Electromagnetic energy is not converted from the surface wave field to another form of energy except in leaky or lossy surface waves 13 such that the wave does not transmit power normal to the interface i e it is evanescent along that dimension 14 In coaxial cable in addition to the TEM mode there also exists a transverse magnetic TM mode 15 which propagates as a surface wave in the region around the central conductor For coax of common impedance this mode is effectively suppressed but in high impedance coax and on a single central conductor without any outer shield low attenuation and very broadband propagation is supported Transmission line operation in this mode is called E Line Surface plasmon polariton edit nbsp The E field of a surface plasmon polariton at a silver air interface at a frequency corresponding to a free space wavelength of 10mm At this frequency the silver behaves approximately as a perfect electric conductor and the SPP is called a Sommerfeld Zenneck wave with almost the same wavelength as the free space wavelength The surface plasmon polariton SPP is an electromagnetic surface wave that can travel along an interface between two media with different dielectric constants It exists under the condition that the permittivity of one of the materials 6 forming the interface is negative while the other one is positive as is the case for the interface between air and a lossy conducting medium below the plasma frequency The wave propagates parallel to the interface and decays exponentially vertical to it a property called evanescence Since the wave is on the boundary of a lossy conductor and a second medium these oscillations can be sensitive to changes to the boundary such as the adsorption of molecules by the conducting surface 16 Sommerfeld Zenneck surface wave edit The Sommerfeld Zenneck wave or Zenneck wave is a non radiative guided electromagnetic wave that is supported by a planar or spherical interface between two homogeneous media having different dielectric constants This surface wave propagates parallel to the interface and decays exponentially vertical to it a property known as evanescence It exists under the condition that the permittivity of one of the materials forming the interface is negative while the other one is positive as for example the interface between air and a lossy conducting medium such as the terrestrial transmission line below the plasma frequency Its electric field strength falls off at a rate of e ad d in the direction of propagation along the interface due to two dimensional geometrical field spreading at a rate of 1 d in combination with a frequency dependent exponential attenuation a which is the terrestrial transmission line dissipation where a depends on the medium s conductivity Arising from original analysis by Arnold Sommerfeld and Jonathan Zenneck of the problem of wave propagation over a lossy earth it exists as an exact solution to Maxwell s equations 17 The Zenneck surface wave which is a non radiating guided wave mode can be derived by employing the Hankel transform of a radial ground current associated with a realistic terrestrial Zenneck surface wave source 6 Sommerfeld Zenneck surface waves predict that the energy decays as R 1 because the energy distributes over the circumference of a circle and not the surface of a sphere Evidence does not show that in radio space wave propagation Sommerfeld Zenneck surfaces waves are a mode of propagation as the path loss exponent is generally between 20 dB dec and 40 dB dec See also editSeismic waves Seismic communication P waves S waves Surface acoustic wave Sky waves the primary means of HF transmission Surface plasmon a longitudinal charge density wave along the interface of conducting and dielectric mediums Surface wave sustained mode a propagation of electromagnetic surface waves Evanescent waves and evanescent wave coupling Ocean surface waves internal waves and crests dispersion and freak waves Love wave and Rayleigh Lamb wave Gravity waves occurs at certain natural interfaces e g the atmosphere and ocean Stoneley wave Scholte wave Dyakonov surface wave People Arnold Sommerfeld published a mathematical treatise on the Zenneck wave Jonathan Zenneck Pupil of Sommerfeld Wireless pioneer developed the Zenneck wave John Stone Stone Wireless pioneer produced theories on radio propagation Other Ground constants the electrical parameters of earth Near and far field the radiated field that is within one quarter of a wavelength of the diffracting edge or the antenna and beyond Skin effect the tendency of an alternating electric current to distribute itself within a conductor so that the current density near the surface of the conductor is greater than that at its core Surface wave inversion Green s function a function used to solve inhomogeneous differential equations subject to boundary conditions References edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Federal Standard 1037C General Services Administration Archived from the original on 2022 01 22 in support of MIL STD 188 The Physical Reality of Zenneck s Surface Wave Hill D A and J R Wait 1978 Excitation of the Zenneck surface wave by a vertical aperture Radio Sci 13 6 969 977 doi 10 1029 RS013i006p00969 Goubau G Uber die Zennecksche Bodenwelle On the Zenneck Surface Wave Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Physik Vol 3 1951 Nrs 3 4 pp 103 107 Barlow H Brown J 1962 II Radio Surface Waves London Oxford University Press pp 10 12 a b c Corum K L M W Miller J F Corum Surface Waves and the Crucial Propagation Experiment Proceedings of the 2016 Texas Symposium on Wireless and Microwave Circuits and Systems WMCS 2016 Baylor University Waco TX March 31 April 1 2016 IEEE MTT S ISBN 9781509027569 Wait James Excitation of Surface Waves on Conducting Stratified Dielectric Clad and Corrugated Surfaces Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards Vol 59 No 6 December 1957 Dyakonov M I April 1988 New type of electromagnetic wave propagating at an interface Soviet Physics JETP 67 4 714 Bibcode 1988JETP 67 714D Takayama O Crasovan L C Johansen S K Mihalache D Artigas D Torner L 2008 Dyakonov Surface Waves A Review Electromagnetics 28 3 126 145 doi 10 1080 02726340801921403 S2CID 121726611 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Takayama O Crasovan L C Artigas D Torner L 2009 Observation of Dyakonov surface waves Physical Review Letters 102 4 043903 Bibcode 2009PhRvL 102d3903T doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 102 043903 PMID 19257419 S2CID 14540394 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Takayama O Artigas D Torner L 2014 Lossless directional guiding of light in dielectric nanosheets using Dyakonov surface waves Nature Nanotechnology 9 6 419 424 Bibcode 2014NatNa 9 419T doi 10 1038 nnano 2014 90 PMID 24859812 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Takayama O Bogdanov A A Lavrinenko A V 2017 Photonic surface waves on metamaterial interfaces Journal of Physics Condensed Matter 29 46 463001 Bibcode 2017JPCM 29T3001T doi 10 1088 1361 648X aa8bdd PMID 29053474 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Liu Hsuan Hao Chang Hung Chun 2013 Leaky Surface Plasmon Polariton Modes at an Interface Between Metal and Uniaxially Anisotropic Materials IEEE Photonics Journal 5 6 4800806 Bibcode 2013IPhoJ 500806L doi 10 1109 JPHOT 2013 2288298 Collin R E Field Theory of Guided Waves Chapter 11 Surface Waveguides New York Wiley IEEE Press 1990 TM mode PDF corridor biz Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 4 April 2018 S Zeng Baillargeat Dominique Ho Ho Pui Yong Ken Tye 2014 Nanomaterials enhanced surface plasmon resonance for biological and chemical sensing applications Chemical Society Reviews 43 10 3426 3452 doi 10 1039 C3CS60479A hdl 10220 18851 PMID 24549396 Barlow H Brown J 1962 Radio Surface Waves London Oxford University Press pp v vii Further reading editStandards and doctrines edit Surface wave Archived 2017 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Telecom Glossary 2000 ATIS Committee T1A1 Performance and Signal Processing T1 523 2001 Surface wave Federal Standard 1037C Surface wave MIL STD 188 Multi service tactics techniques and procedures for the High Frequency Automatic Link Establishment HF ALE FM 6 02 74 MCRP 3 40 3E NTTP 6 02 6 AFTTP I 3 2 48 COMDTINST M2000 7 Sept 2003 Books edit Barlow H M and Brown J Radio Surface Waves Oxford University Press 1962 Budden K G Radio waves in the ionosphere the mathematical theory of the reflection of radio waves from stratified ionised layers Cambridge Eng University Press 1961 LCCN 61016040 L r85 Budden K G The wave guide mode theory of wave propagation London Logos Press Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall c1961 LCCN 62002870 L Budden K G The propagation of radio waves the theory of radio waves of low power in the ionosphere and magnetosphere Cambridge Cambridgeshire New York Cambridge University Press 1985 ISBN 0 521 25461 2 LCCN 84028498 Collin R E Field Theory of Guided Waves New York Wiley IEEE Press 1990 Foti S Lai C G Rix G J and Strobbia C Surface Wave Methods for Near Surface Site Characterization CRC Press Boca Raton Florida USA 487 pp ISBN 9780415678766 2014 lt https www crcpress com product isbn 9780415678766 gt Sommerfeld A Partial Differential Equations in Physics English version Academic Press Inc New York 1949 chapter 6 Problems of Radio Polo Jr J A Mackay T G and Lakhtakia A Electromagnetic Surface Waves A Modern Perspective Waltham MA USA Elsevier 2013 lt https www elsevier com books electromagnetic surface waves polo 978 0 12 397024 4 gt Rawer K Wave Propagation in the Ionosphere Dordrecht Kluwer Acad Publ 1993 Sommerfeld A Partial Differential Equations in Physics English version Academic Press Inc New York 1949 chapter 6 Problems of Radio Weiner Melvin M Monopole antennas New York Marcel Dekker 2003 ISBN 0 8247 0496 7 Wait J R Electromagnetic Wave Theory New York Harper and Row 1985 Wait J R The Waves in Stratified Media New York Pergamon 1962 Waldron Richard Arthur Theory of guided electromagnetic waves London New York Van Nostrand Reinhold 1970 ISBN 0 442 09167 2 LCCN 69019848 r86 Weiner Melvin M Monopole antennas New York Marcel Dekker 2003 ISBN 0 8247 0496 7 Journals and papers edit Zenneck Sommerfeld Norton and Goubau J Zenneck translators P Blanchin G Guerard E Picot Precis de telegraphie sans fil complement de l ouvrage Les oscillations electromagnetiques et la telegraphie sans fil Paris Gauthier Villars 1911 viii 385 p ill 26 cm Tr Precisions of wireless telegraphy complement of the work Electromagnetic oscillations and wireless telegraphy J Zenneck Uber die Fortpflanzung ebener elektromagnetischer Wellen langs einer ebenen Leiterflache und ihre Beziehung zur drahtlosen Telegraphie Annalen der Physik vol 23 pp 846 866 Sept 1907 Tr About the propagation of electromagnetic plane waves along a conductor plane and their relationship to wireless telegraphy J Zenneck Elektromagnetische Schwingungen und drahtlose Telegraphie gart F Enke 1905 xxvii 1019 p ill 24 cm Tr Electromagnetic oscillations and wireless telegraphy J Zenneck translator A E Seelig Wireless telegraphy New York etc McGraw Hill Book Company inc 1st ed 1915 xx 443 p illus diagrs 24 cm LCCN 15024534 ed Bibliography and notes on theory pp 408 428 A Sommerfeld Uber die Fortpflanzung elektrodynamischer Wellen langs eines Drahtes Ann der Physik und Chemie vol 67 pp 233 290 Dec 1899 Tr Propagation of electro dynamic waves along a cylindric conductor A Sommerfeld Uber die Ausbreitung der Wellen in der drahtlosen Telegraphie Annalen der Physik Vol 28 pp 665 736 March 1909 Tr About the Propagation of waves in wireless telegraphy A Sommerfeld Propagation of waves in wireless telegraphy Ann Phys vol 81 pp 1367 1153 1926 K A Norton The propagation of radio waves over the surface of the earth and in the upper atmosphere Proc IRE vol 24 pp 1367 1387 1936 K A Norton The calculations of ground wave field intensity over a finitely conducting spherical earth Proc IRE vol 29 pp 623 639 1941 G Goubau Surface waves and their application to transmission lines J Appl Phys vol 21 pp 1119 1128 November 1950 G Goubau Uber die Zennecksche Bodenwelle Tr On the Zenneck Surface Wave Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Physik Vol 3 1951 Nrs 3 4 pp 103 107 Wait Wait J R Lateral Waves and the Pioneering Research of the Late Kenneth A Norton Wait J R and D A Hill Excitation of the HF surface wave by vertical and horizontal apertures Radio Science 14 1979 pp 767 780 Wait J R and D A Hill Excitation of the Zenneck Surface Wave by a Vertical Aperture Radio Science Vol 13 No 6 November December 1978 pp 969 977 Wait J R A note on surface waves and ground waves IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation Nov 1965 Vol 13 Issue 6 pp 996 997 ISSN 0096 1973 Wait J R The ancient and modern history of EM ground wave propagation IEEE Antennas Propagat Mag vol 40 pp 7 24 Oct 1998 Wait J R Appendix C On the theory of ground wave propagation over a slightly roughned curved earth Electromagnetic Probing in Geophysics Boulder CO Golem 1971 pp 37 381 Wait J R Electromagnetic surface waves Advances in Radio Research 1 New York Academic Press 1964 pp 157 219 Others R E Collin Hertzian Dipole Radiating Over a Lossy Earth or Sea Some Early and Late 20th Century Controversies Antennas and Propagation Magazine 46 2004 pp 64 79 F J Zucker Surface wave antennas and surface wave excited arrays Antenna Engineering Handbook 2nd ed R C Johnson and H Jasik Eds New York McGraw Hill 1984 Yu V Kistovich Possibility of Observing Zenneck Surface Waves in Radiation from a Source with a Small Vertical Aperture Soviet Physics Technical Physics Vol 34 No 4 April 1989 pp 391 394 V I Baĭbakov V N Datsko Yu V Kistovich Experimental discovery of Zenneck s surface electromagnetic waves Sov Phys Uspekhi 1989 32 4 378 379 Corum K L and J F Corum The Zenneck Surface Wave Nikola Tesla Lightning Observations and Stationary Waves Appendix II 1994 M J King and J C Wiltse Surface Wave Propagation on Coated or Uncoated Metal Wires at Millimeter Wavelengths J Appl Phys vol 21 pp 1119 1128 November M J King and J C Wiltse Surface Wave Propagation on a Dielectric Rod of Electric Cross Section Electronic Communications Inc Tirnonium kld Sci Rept No 1 AFCKL Contract No AF 19 601 5475 August 1960 T Kahan and G Eckart On the Electromagnetic Surface Wave of Sommerfeld Phys Rev 76 406 410 1949 Other media edit L A Ostrovsky ed Laboratory modeling and theoretical studies of surface wave modulation by a moving sphere m Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Laboratories 2002 OCLC 50325097External links editThe Feynman Lectures on Physics Surface waves Eric W Weisstein et al Surface Wave Eric Weisstein s World of Physics 2006 David Reiss Electromagnetic surface waves The Net Advance of Physics Special Reports No 1 Gary Peterson Rediscovering the Zenneck wave Feed Line No 4 ed reproduction available online at 21st Century Books 3D Waves by Jesse Nochella based on a program by Stephen Wolfram Wolfram Demonstrations Project Hendry Janice 2009 SURFACE WAVES WHAT ARE THEY WHY ARE THEY INTERESTING PDF ARMMS RF amp MICROWAVE SOCIETY Roke Manor Research Ltd Retrieved 24 December 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Surface wave amp oldid 1219877815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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